| censorship |
Decisive acts of forbidding or preventing publication or distribution of media products, or parts of those products, by those with the power, either economic or legislative, to do so.
Ãâó: freespace.virgin.net/brendan.richards/glossary/glo...
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| censorship |
Changes required of a movie by some person or body other than the studio or the filmmakers, usually a national or regional film classification board. See also certificate.
Ãâó: www.teako170.com/glossary2.html
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| censorship |
The act of hiding, removing, altering or destroying copies of art or writing so that general public access to it is partially or completely limited. Contrast with bowdlerization. Click here to download a PDF handout discussing censorship in great detail. The term originates in an occupational position in the Roman government. After the fifth century BCE, Rome commissioned "censors. ...
Ãâó: web.cn.edu/kwheeler/lit_terms_C.html
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| censored d. |
in statistics, observations whose final outcomes are not completely determined in a study, as, for example, data for patients who have not yet reached the study's endpoint (e.g., relapse or death) when the data are analyzed or who drop out of the study before reaching that endpoint.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| censor |
magistrate whose duty was to review the list of senators and to keep a close check on the registration and classification of citizens. A censor was an ex-consul & the position was elected every five years.
Ãâó: www.stockton.edu/~roman/fiction/vocab.htm
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